1996-09-25 - [EFG] Fwd: Ga. Internet Law Challenged

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From: camcc@abraxis.com
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
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Message ID: <2.2.32.19960925010103.00679840@smtp1.abraxis.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1996-09-25 04:24:28 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 25 Sep 1996 12:24:28 +0800

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From: camcc@abraxis.com
Date: Wed, 25 Sep 1996 12:24:28 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: [EFG] Fwd: Ga. Internet Law Challenged
Message-ID: <2.2.32.19960925010103.00679840@smtp1.abraxis.com>
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>X-Sender: smcclain@pop.atl.mindspring.com
>Date: Tue, 24 Sep 1996 16:47:07 -0400
>To: efg-action@ninja.techwood.org
>Reply-To: efg-action@ninja.techwood.org
>
>>From:	AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
>>Date: 96-09-24 15:25:54 EDT
>>
>>.c The Associated Press
>>      ATLANTA (AP) -- The American Civil Liberties Union and computer
>>activists filed suit Tuesday challenging a new Georgia law they
>>contend restricts free speech in cyberspace.
>>      ``Fundamental civil liberties are as important in cyberspace as
>>they are in traditional contexts,'' said Ann Beeson, an ACLU
>>attorney who specializes in computer law.
>>      Plaintiffs in the suit filed in federal court also include state
>>Rep. Mitch Kaye, R-Marietta, who fought the law's passage, and
>>Electronic Frontiers Georgia, a computer liberties organization.
>>      The law took effect July 1. It bars computer users from falsely
>>identifying themselves, a provision which critics contend makes it
>>illegal to use pseudonyms in electronic messages sent by computer.
>>Some computer services allow users to send messages that identify
>>them only by a pseudonym or account number.
>>      The law also makes it a crime for someone to use a company's
>>trademark or symbol without permission. Critics argue that could
>>make criminals of Web page owners who have established links to
>>help users move quickly from their pages to those of corporate
>>America.
>>      Robert Costner of Electronic Frontiers Georgia said that aspect
>>of the law could subject his own group to penalties because its Web
>>page provides a link to BellSouth's page to assist computer users
>>in contacting the company about a recent rate increase.
>>      Rep. Don Parsons, R-Marietta, who steered the law to passage,
>>has said critics are overreacting.
>>      The law only makes it illegal for a person to misrepresent
>>himself on the network, posing as someone or something else, he
>>noted.
>>      ``If somebody uses that type of data, such as a trade name, to
>>identify themselves as some other organization, then they clearly
>>are seeking to defraud,'' Parsons said last spring.
>>      Gov. Zell Miller signed the bill April 18 despite a warning from
>>the attorney general that it was vague and a plea for a veto from
>>the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, which
>>called the measure an unconstitutional restraint on free speech
>>rights.
>>      Ms. Beeson said the suit appears to be the first legal challenge
>>in the country to an individual state's attempt to regulate the
>>Internet.
>>      ``If 50 states pass 50 contradictory laws, Internet users will
>>be virtually paralyzed for fear of violating one or more of those
>>laws,'' she said.
>>      AP-NY-09-24-96 1523EDT
>>      Copyright 1996 The Associated Press.  The information 
>>contained in the AP news report may not be published, 
>>broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without 
>>prior written authority of The Associated Press.






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